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Top 5 cloud computing trends of 2024
Member post by Sameer Danave, Senior Director of Marketing, MSys Technologies Every time I think I have this whole technology game down to a science, something changes in the blink of an eye. And if you’re as enthusiastic… ⌘ Read more

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Is your supply chain secure? Double check with our framework
A secure supply chain is a critical piece of cloud native security, and it can be tricky to get right because it covers such a broad expanse of factors from code to pipelines and beyond. Join us on… ⌘ Read more

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Celebrating 1 year of A11y Design Bootcamp: Takeaways and tips
A11y Design Bootcamp is a live educational program that consists of exercises, discussions, and knowledge shares to raise awareness of web accessibility best practices, the role designers play in creating accessible products, and how to advocate for accessibility with cross-functional partners.

The post [Celebrating 1 year of A11y Design Bootcamp: Takeaways and tips](https://github.blog/2024-05-02-celebrating-1- … ⌘ Read more

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Early explorations and practices of Xline, a stateful application managed by Karmada
Member post by DatenLord Background and Motivation More and more IT vendors are now embracing cross-cloud multi-clustering as cloud-native technologies and cloud markets continue to mature. Here’s Flexera’s mid-2023 survey on the cloud-native market’s acceptance of multi-cloud, multi-cluster… ⌘ Read more

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Erlang Solutions: Naming your Daemons
Within Unix systems, a daemon is a long-running background process which does not directly interact with users. Many similar processes exist within a BEAM application. At times it makes sense to name them, allowing sending messages without requiring the knowledge of their process identifier (aka PID). There are several benefits to naming processes, these include:

  1. Organised processes: using a descriptive and meaningful name organises the processes in the system. It cla … ⌘ Read more

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Empowering accessibility: GitHub’s journey building an in-house Champions program
As part of GitHub’s dedication to accessibility, we expanded our internal accessibility program and scaled up our internal auditing process to help remove or lower barriers for users with disabilities. Then, we empowered employees from various disciplines to drive accessibility efforts within their teams.

The post [Empowering accessibility: GitHub’s journey building an … ⌘ Read more

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Accelerating Machine Learning with GPUs in Kubernetes using the NVIDIA Device Plugin
Member post originally published on the SuberOrbital blog by Keegan McCallum NVIDIA Device Plugin for Kubernetes plays a crucial role in enabling organizations to harness the power of GPUs for accelerating machine learning workloads. Introduction Generative AI is… ⌘ Read more

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FinOps for Kubernetes: engineering cost optimization
Community post by Saqib Jan Cloud has given on-demand access to compute resources, but high availability also makes cost a much more dynamic problem to forecast. This reverberates as companies continue to expand their cloud footprints and adopt… ⌘ Read more

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The hidden economy of open source software
Member post originally published on Sysdig’s blog by Nigel Douglas The recent discovery of a backdoor in XZ Utils (CVE-2024-3094), a data compression utility used by a wide array of various open-source, Linux-based computer applications, underscores the importance of open-source… ⌘ Read more

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Open source software in AI and cloud trends to watch in 2024: thoughts from the Netris community
Member post originally published on Netris’s blog Let’s face it: The world of open source software can feel boring – in a good way. Open source has become so pervasive, and so deeply entrenched within modern software stacks… ⌘ Read more

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How Katalyst guarantees memory QoS for colocated applications
Member post originally published on Katalyst’s blog In the previous post[1], we introduced Katalyst – a QoS-based resource management system that helps ByteDance improve resource efficiency through colocation of online and offline workloads. In the colocation scenario, memory… ⌘ Read more

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Erlang Solutions: Technical debt and HR – what do they have in common?
At first glance, it may sound absurd. Here we have technical debt, a purely engineering problem, as technical as it can get, and another area, HR, dealing with psychology and emotions, put into one sentence. Is it possible that they are closely related? Let’s take it apart and see.

Exploring technical debt

What is technical debt, anyway? A tongue-in-cheek definition is that it is code written by someo … ⌘ Read more

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ProcessOne: ejabberd Docs now using MkDocs
The ejabberd Docs website did just get a major rework: new content management system, reorganized navigation, improved markdown, and several improvements!

Brief documentation timeline

ejabberd started in November 2002 (see a timeline in the ejabberd turns 20 blog post). And the first documentation was published in January 2003, using LaTeX, see [Ejabberd Installation and Op … ⌘ Read more

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